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Lee’s way – POLITICO

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THE BUZZ: Rep. Barbara Lee’s Senate hopes hinge on a coalition of progressive and multiracial voters — and this weekend we got a glimpse of how that could coalesce.

Congressional Progressive Caucus Chair Pramila Jayapal is throwing her weight behind former caucus co-chair Lee. “Barbara Lee, in my view, is the OG of progressive intersectional politics” who “knows how to move the needle on some really tough issues,” Jayapal said in a Saturday interview, citing Lee’s work on thorny foreign policy issues like repealing 9/11-era war powers.

The nod from Jayapal boosts Lee’s efforts to seize the progressive mantle. All three Democrats vying to replace Sen. Dianne Feinstein have appealed to the left, knowing it could be the key to a primary plurality. Rep. Katie Porter has leaned into her identity as the scourge of big corporations and other entrenched powers, bolstering that cred with an endorsement from Sen. Elizabeth Warren. Rep. Adam Schiff briefly tried to join the Progressive Caucus before withdrawing his request. Lee also has Berniecrat Ro Khanna in her camp.

Lee trails Schiff and Porter in early polls and fundraising totals. She’s hoping to make up the gap both by capitalizing on her status as a progressive stalwart and by channeling voters of color. If California makes Lee the only Black woman in the Senate, it will likely have much to do with Black women. (As Lee noted in 2020: “Black women have been smart, we’ve been strategic, we’ve helped elect so many candidates to public office.”)

“I think voters will look at this race and think about which voices are not represented in the Senate,” Jayapal said, pointing to Lee’s background as a single mother of color. “While there may be some common views on progressive issues, I think progressives are going to look at who brings a set of experiences and who has the conscience and courage to speak out in important moments.”

The Oakland Democrat has emphasized representation, arguing an upper chamber without a single Black woman doesn’t truly reflect American society. Lee’s campaign has stressed her history of overcoming the barriers society throws in front of people of color. And Lee’s campaign is also asserting — including in her fundraising prospectus — that she’s uniquely suited to appeal to the voters of color who comprise a potentially decisive primary bloc.

Lee is deeply enmeshed in the world of Black political power. She came up as an aide to former Congress member and Oakland mayor Ron Dellums, led the Congressional Black Caucus, founded an organization to help elect Black women and was a top presidential surrogate for then-Sen. Kamala Harris. She didn’t get the call to replace Harris in the Senate despite a campaign to draft a Black woman, and she told POLITICO in February that “the Senate is missing what Black women bring.”

Black women are hoping to help correct that. Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass was one of Lee’s early endorsers, joined in short order by numerous Congressional Black Caucus members. This weekend, San Francisco Mayor London Breed, Contra Costa County District Attorney Diana Becton, and She the People’s Aimee Allison joined the national progressive Power PAC+ to launch a pro-Lee super PAC. “We need her in the U.S. Senate so we can have a voice,” Breed said.

BUENOS DÍAS, good Monday morning. Happy May Day to those who celebrate — given organized labor’s clout in California, that probably includes a few of you reading this.

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WHERE’S GAVIN? Back from his sojourn in Washington, D.C.

QUOTE OF THE DAY: “Politically, San Francisco is this weird combination of very progressive and quite conservative — very progressive in a lot of the ways that we would consider what is progressive, in terms of having a strong minimum wage and supporting immigrants and supporting LGBTQ people and so forth, and getting rid of plastics. On the other hand, it’s a city that has, in recent decades, been very afraid of change.” state Sen. Scott Wiener on the city he represents, via Ezra Klein in The New York Times.

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